Archives

Top Posts

Archive for the ‘Markets’ Category

Governor Patrick says there’s a real possibility that people in America could freeze to death this winter due to the soaring cost of home heating fuel. Patrick met with members of the Massachusetts congressional delegation on Capitol Hill and later testified before a House panel on the need for heating aid in cold-weather states.

The dollar edged slightly higher against the euro on Friday despite a downward revision to US growth and as traders held their breath for US politicians to decide the fate of a huge financial rescue package.The US Federal Reserve meanwhile launched a new effort with other central banks to keep money markets alive as US lawmakers wrangled over a plan to end the worst financial crisis in almost a century.

The economic turmoil on Wall Street has not reached the dusty country roads in the nation’s Heartland, where a rural economic boom has meant farmers are not having much trouble getting loans to plant crops, buy land and replace equipment.

“The fundamentals of agriculture right now, in terms of income and opportunities, is good. There are profits to be made, so I think that is underpinning the willingness to lend to that sector,” said Jason Henderson, a branch executive with the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City.

The rush by retail investors into gold on Thursday forced the US government to “temporarily” suspend the sales of the popular American Buffalo one-ounce bullion coin after depleting its inventories.

The shortage of gold coins is the latest sign of investors seeking a safe haven into bullion amid Wall Street woes. Gold prices this week surged above $900 an ounce, up about 20 per cent from its level before the collapse of Lehman Brothers.

FORWARD freight agreement traders have again shouldered some of the blame for tumbling dry bulk indices, as investment banks and hedge funds sell off derivatives contracts during the crisis gripping the global financial sector.

The move has added further pressure to the Baltic Dry Index, which fell 6.1% to its lowest level in 19 months today.

Rival insurer MassMutual Asia Ltd. acknowledged that the suspects were its agents and managers and staff hired by them. However, it denied in a statement that the company was involved in the case and said it would cooperate in the police investigation.

For Mexico’s state oil company, Pemex, the good news came when twin severe hurricanes avoided its offshore oil platforms this month.

The bad news came after the storms struck U.S. Gulf Coast refineries, slashing oil demand in its biggest market. Pemex said late Wednesday it has been forced to trim its already struggling oil output by 250,000 barrels a day, or 9%, due to brimming inventories caused by lingering outages at U.S. plants.

There is “not a single chance” that Belgian-Dutch banking and insurance group Fortis will go bankrupt, its chief executive officer Herman Verwilst said Friday.”There is not one single chance that we will face issues in that respect,” he said when asked of the possibility of bankruptcy during a telephone conference with media.

The company’s shares took a beating for a second day Friday amid liquidity concerns brought on by turmoil in world financial markets

T. Boone Pickens, the 80-year-old oilman-turned-hedge-fund-manager, has already promised to pay $60-million (U.S.) of his own money to push his vision to reduce U.S. dependence on foreign oil. Now he is convinced he has worked up a way to drive the message home in Washington, with a burgeoning grassroots lobby force he calls his “army.”

The Texas billionaire says he has dropped a billion in the recent turmoil, but the recent painful pullback in oil prices has not shaken his conviction as a long-term energy bull, or his belief that the largest economy in the world has to source more of its energy needs at home.